The novel - The Great Gatsby - has many messages hidden within its pages. One main message is of the American Dream. They give an explanation very subtly. F. Scott Fitzgerald uses three examples of this one is of a sham marriage, working life, and destroyed families. These examples are basis to the story, as well as the others. This thesis states that The American Dream Is Dead. One example of this is with sham marriages. Not only does the author provide one, but two. These two marriages are between Tom and Daisy Buchanan and Myrtle and George Wilson. The American Dream consists of three key objects. The perfect marriage is one. However this not true, every marriage has it ups and downs. Then we have these disastrous marriages. People who are only married for convenience, their marriages are only for personal gain. These relationships are not real, the only moment they consider their marriage real is when others start …show more content…
The American Dream had the picture perfect family, with parents care for their child's happiness and well-being. The novel gives two examples. One when Daisy was young and another with his Daisy treats her own daughter. When Daisy was young and in "love" with Gatsby, she fights her family to sneak off to see him. Her family forbade it, because they wanted her to marry rich. “We gave her spirits of ammonia and put ice on her forehead and hooked her back into her dress, and half an hour later, when we walked out of the room, the pearls were around her neck and the incident was over. Next day at five o’clock she married Tom Buchanan without so much as a shiver, and started off on a three months’ trip to the South Seas.” Chapter 4. The other example is how Daisy and Tom treat their child. Their young daughter Pammy does not even live with them. They also seem to forget she exists. Pammy makes one appearance in the book and that is just for her to say hello. This is not the American